cell communication (signalling) and cell cycle Flashcards
What are the two types of communication?
describe them
Transport / trafficking (vesicular)
- physical movement of proteins and lipids within the cell
signalling
- transport of a specific signal received from outside to elicit a cellular response
describe signalling
describe how the following play a part.
neurotransmitters
protein molecules
hormones
Signalling is linked to transport / trafficking; specific molecules secreted from the cells by exocytosis act as signalling molecules
neurotransmitters
- secreted from neuron act on downstream target - muscle cell or another neutron
protein molecules
- secreted from a signalling cell act locally on the target cell and ensures functioning of cell in very close proximity (within a tissues)
hormones
- secreted from endocrine cell and delivered t a target cell through circulation
Further describe cell signalling
cell signalling is a process of covering extracellular signal (signalling molecules) into intracellular response (altered metabolism, gene expression or cell shape / motility) via transduction cascade initiated by
extracellular signal + receptor engagement.
describe signalling - transduction cascade
- initiated by signal receptor engagement
- leads to amplification of signal
- done by firstly activating secondary messenger systems e.g G protein
- then activation of protein phosphorylation cascade (AKT)
- this activates specific target proteins
1 signal + receptor engagement can lead to activation of multiple responses
Signalling - target protein & intracellular response.
what 3 target proteins are activated by phosphorylation cascade?
how do the cells respond?
transcription factors
enzymes
cytoskeletal proteins
gene expression regulation
metabolism alteration
cell motility and shape alteration
overall response to signalling
survive
grow and divide
differentiation (progenitor cell differentiates into mature cell)
die (apoptosis - programmed cell death and necrosis)
DNA - chromosomes. describe.
- long molecules of DNA coiled together with histones (proteins)
- present in non-dividing cell as chromatin (diffuse granular mass)
- in dividing cell, DNA replicates, loops condense forming pair of chromatids also known as chromosome
- somatic cell has 46 chromosomes (23 pairs)
Cell cycle. definition and 2 major phases
orderly sequence of events in which somatic cell duplicates its contents and divides into two
interphase
- duplication of cell material
mitotic phase
- division of cell material
Interphase stage of cell cycle
consists of 3 phases. what are they
G1 phase
- cell metabolic rate increases, organelles and cytosolic components duplicated
S phase
- DNA replication and chromosomes condensing
G2 phase
- cell growth continues, synthesis of proteins and enzymes
Cell division definition.
describe the two types
cell division is the process by which cells reproduce themselves. it consists of nuclear division (mitosis and meiosis) and cytoplasmic division (cytokinesis)
- increased body cells is called somatic cell division
- production of sperm and eggs is called reproductive cell division
Mitotic phase - definition and stages
formation of two identical somatic cells and consists of 2 divisions
- nuclear division (mitosis)
- cytoplasmic division (cytokinesis)
stages include (PMAT)
- prophase
- metaphase
- anaphase
- telophase
Prophase. describe early and late
Early prophase
- chromatin condenses and shortens into visible chromosomes
- pair of identical chromatids held together by centromere
Late prophase
- nucleolus and nuclear envelope disappeared
- each centrosome starts to move towards opposite ends of cell via mitotic spindle
Metaphase
- microtubules of mitotic spindle align centromeres of chromatid pair at centre of mitotic spindle
- midpoint region called metaphase plate
Anaphase. early and late
Early
- centromeres split separating the 2 members of each chromatid pair
- each member now called a chromosome) moves towards opposite poles of cell
Late
- cleavage furrow forms
Telophase
- begins after chromosomal movement stops
- chromosomes uncoil and revert to threadlike chromatin form
- nuclear envelope forms
- mitotic spindle breaks up